Abstract
Diacodexeids are widely considered to be a paraphyletic group consisting of the oldest and most primitive artiodactyls that made their sudden appearance in all northern continents around the Palaeocene–Eocene boundary. In South Asia, the first record of artiodactyls is marked by the appearance of Gujaratia indica from the early Ypresian (∼55 Ma) Cambay Shale of the Vastan lignite mine, India, which is slightly younger than the oldest artiodactyls from Europe and North America. Here we describe new dental material of G. indica, documenting associated upper dentition, including P4, a new locus. Gujaratia (including G. pakistanensis and G. indica) is clearly distinct from all known diacodexeids in having the most triangular upper molars and lower molars with weaker paraconids. Cladistic analysis performed to assess the phylogenetic relationships of Gujaratia with other diacodexeids, dichobunoids, raoellids and pakicetids shows that Gujaratia is monophyletic while Diacodexis and Diacodexeidae are strongly polyphyletic. Gujaratia is found to be closer to the North American diacodexeids and D. gigasei and D. morrisi from Europe, which form a paraphyletic group. The European Diacodexis represents an unnatural grouping with D. antunesi being most closely related to a clade comprising dichobunids and homacodontids, and D. gazini and D. varleti occupying basal positions in a clade comprising raoellids and pakicetids. Dichobunidae is also recovered as a polyphyletic group whereas Homacodontidae is paraphyletic. Raoellids and pakicetids, long considered to be endemic to the Indian subcontinent, are monophyletic and without close affinities to Gujaratia, and appear to be more closely allied to some European dichobunoids, e.g., D. gazini, necessitating a reappraisal of current ideas about artiodactyl origins.
Acknowledgements
We thank the two anonymous reviewers and the editors for their constructive comments which helped improve the manuscript. We thank D. Datta for helpful comments on phylogeny. We are grateful to D. Das, V. V. Kapur, N. Saravanan and R. Sharma for assistance during the fieldwork, and the officials and staff of GIPCL for permission to work and for logistic support in the Vastan lignite mine. We also thank A. Juyal for taking SEM images at the Dept. of Earth Sciences, IIT Roorkee. AR acknowledges financial support provided under the Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Fellowship, CSIR, New Delhi, Government of India (SPM09/0143(16119)/2022-EMR-I). SB acknowledges support obtained from DST, Government of India (SR/S4/ES-222/2006) and the IITR Institute Chair Professorship.
Disclosure statement
The authors report there are no competing interests to declare.
Supplemental material
Supplemental material for this article can be accessed here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14772019.2023.2267553.
Associate Editor: Alistair Evans